MONTANARI Violin Concertos
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Antonio Maria Montanari
Genre:
Orchestral
Magazine Review Date: 02/2016
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 59
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: ADX13704
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto 'Dresden' |
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer Ensemble Diderot Johannes Pramsohler, Violin |
Concerto No 6 |
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer Ensemble Diderot Johannes Pramsohler, Violin |
Concerto No 1 |
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer Ensemble Diderot Johannes Pramsohler, Violin |
Concerto No 5 |
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer Ensemble Diderot Johannes Pramsohler, Violin |
Concerto No 7 |
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer Ensemble Diderot Johannes Pramsohler, Violin |
Concerto No 8 |
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer
Antonio Maria Montanari, Composer Ensemble Diderot Johannes Pramsohler, Violin |
Author: Charlotte Gardner
The disc presents four of a group of eight concertos for one or two violins published in Amsterdam around 1730, plus a probably later concerto collected by Quantz (conversely, the least interesting of the lot). A whistlestop description of the Montanari sound would include harmonic inventiveness and greater virtuoso demands made of the principal violinist than with Corelli’s works (although still less than with Vivaldi). Also light textures, which are accentuated by a viola part not always being included, and continuo often played without a bowed bass, theorbo or lute.
It’s all music that would shine through even in merely adequate performances, but Ensemble Diderot’s one-to-a-part readings on original instruments are truly superb, translating what have evidently been intense scholarly labours into a recording that sparkles with enjoyment and understanding of the music. Set within the warmly supportive acoustic of Toblach’s Gustav Mahler Saal, limpid crispness and zing sing out over a deliciously mellifluous overall balance. Then, the clean, lyrical virtuosity from principal violinist Johannes Pramsohler, and indeed from harpsichordist Philippe Grisvard, is of the kind that begs you to simply sit back and soak it all up. Listen to the perfection of Pramsohler’s double-stopping in No 1’s second movement or his rapid arpeggiated chords in the Grave of No 8. Equally to savour is the duetting between Pramsohler and second violinist David Wish, for instance their delicate dovetailing in No 1’s lilting, siciliano-like third movement. If only all newly discovered Baroque works sang and fizzed like those in this collection do.
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